This thesis examines the combination problem for panpsychism and its responses. Panpsychism is the view that fundamental physical entities instantiate phenomenal properties and that our consciousness, in some way, comes from those phenomenal properties. Proponents of panpsychism have argued that it is able to retain key benefits of physicalism over dualism whilst responding to objections to physicalism. However, the view is exposed to one notable problem called the combination problem. Roughly, this problem concerns how the microphenomenal properties of the physical combine to form our consciousness. In this thesis, I examine the combination problem and argue against proposed solutions. In assessing the problem, I separate it into two types...